@NikiC Under which circumstances does a zval with type IS_RESOURCE fail the is_resource()? Am I right that this isn't possible anymore with 7.0, if it passed the check at least once?
I want to have a system where people don't have to login to access their page. Could someone provide a high level overview of such a thing? I was simply looking to give the user a link.
My initial thought was have a table with emails and unique identifiers, then email out the link with this identifier in the URL and have that tie back in to their record. Is it really that straight forward?
I was trying to achieve the messages from telegram bot and then retrieving the messages from users and then converting everything with Hi or e.g: hI or something else to lowercase but this is not working :
so I think I get a general feeling of what the different functions in the getting started with amp do. Should I however feel bad that I have no idea where to begin to actually do something cool with it?
@bwoebi I'd like to understand concurrency better. Trying to integrate it into current applications without knowing why seems a bad idea but I'm not sure what specific task could be enough for me to delve into it without losing myself and never finishing.
@nikita2206 I really believe empty argument list omission should not be a thing. Because in the future we may want symmetry on interfaces, so leaving the () as obligatory seems prudent
and callable():callable seems more clear now that we've spent some time away from the RFC
Uncaught TypeError: Argument 3 passed to reduce() must be callable of compliant signature: callable(integer, integer): integer, callable($a, $b, $c) given, called in ...
yeah, i see, I followed how it's usually done for type errors (eg must be %s, %s given) but perhaps I should rephrase it. but I really can't into English sorry...
@bwoebi rust compiler almost slaps you in the face and put an arrow where the mistake is:
rust_dangling.rs:4:14: 4:15 note: previous borrow of `v` occurs here; the immutable borrow prevents subsequent moves or mutable borrows of `v` until the borrow ends
rust_dangling.rs:4 let x = &v[0];
^
the following was given callable($a, $b, $c) - sounds horrible...